I said, “I’m sorry, but I’m not interested,” and started to hang up, but the woman, understanding that I was done with her, tried her best to pull me in. “The edge is a shantytown filled with gold seekers,” she said, her voice rising in pitch, and I froze. I nearly dropped the phone. And together, in harmony, we both completed the phrase, “We are fugitives, and the law is skinny with hunger for us.”
-- Kevin Wilson, _Now Is Not the Time to Panic_
#FridayReads #FirstLineFriday #books #cosobooks
I ANSWERED THE PHONE, AND THERE WAS A WOMAN’S VOICE on the other end, a voice that I didn’t recognize. “Is this Frances Budge?” she asked, and I was certain it was a telemarketer, because nobody called me Frances. In the living room, my seven-year-old daughter had made her own set of drums, including a tin plate for a cymbal, so it was loud as hell in the house, with this ting-bang-ting-ting-bang rhythm she had going on.
Flannery O'Connor's unfinished novel is being published and I don't feel great about this. I get the interest, but maybe if she wasn't ready for the public to see it, it just doesn't need to be seen?
@Kinnison I haven't read this book but I highly recommend Kowal's Lady Astronaut series.
Reading a biography of Jane Seymour, Henry VIII's third wife, and growing a little tired of the pains the biographer is taking to assure me that poor doomed Jane was not a great beauty. She was fine! Stop picking on her, she's going to be dead in a hundred pages or so anyway.
even if you spend your whole life believing yourself to be deeply in touch with the ebb and flow, the cycle, the ecosystem as it actually is, you will still have trouble picturing an untouched world. You will still struggle to understand that human constructs are carved out and overlaid, that these are the places that are the in-between, not the other way around.
-- Becky Chambers, _A Prayer for the Wild-Built_
Even if you fully know that you live in a natural world that existed before you and will continue long after, even if you know that the wilderness is the default state of things, and that nature is not something that only happens in carefully curated enclaves between towns, something that pops up in empty spaces if you ignore them for a while, . . .
@grrlscientist @forbes Oooooh, this has been on my list for a while.
@babaohreally @Marlowe2 That book is so well done but absolutely harrowing to read.
@Moxitude No, no you are not. It upsets me every time I think about it.
A little girl takes her father’s hand and the two of them wander away as her brother begs them to bring him an ice cream cone. Today that sort of beginning feels ominous: what’s going to happen?
https://sophronisba.com/2022/11/26/reading-alice-munro-walker-brothers-cowboy/
@Shesamodiste That's gorgeous. The pop of color makes it.
@agitated_trash Destiny of the Republic is so good, probably Millard's best book.
Reading a biography of Alice Prin (better known as Kiki) and I am already exhausted by her boyfriend: "Man Ray subscribed to the idea that a romantic relationship was a kind of war, and the winner was whoever revealed less of himself to the other."
This reminds me that as much as I love reading about 1920s Paris, I would have lasted about five minutes in a conversation with the ilk of Man Ray and Ernest Hemingway before I lost all patience with their macho nonsense.
If you ask six different monks the question of which godly domain robot consciousness belongs to, you’ll get seven different answers.
-- Becky Chambers, _A Psalm for the Wild-Built_
The wonder is that you could start life with nothing, end with nothing, and lose so much in between.
-- Barbara Kingsolver, _Demon Copperhead_
It's that most wonderful time of the year -- we have the longlist for the Tournament of Books.